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a pint a day 


3 


The Gateway 


_ VOL. LVI, No. 19, THE UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA, EDMONTON, CANADA 


leaves you pale 
and grey 


WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1966, EIGHT PAGES 


MARRIED STUDENT HOUSING—A TENDER SUBJECT 


—Forrest Bard photo 


.- - building the model is about as far as they got 


Old man’s party 


Socreds told to involve youth 


—Perry ATE photo 
: DALE ENARSON 
é «+ Cigar store Socred 


ea a fo 


CALGARY (Staff)—A U of A 
student told delegates to the 37th 
annual Social Credit convention 
last week they had the privilege of 
belonging to what is known as “an 
old man’s party.” 


“T will start by making the state- 
ment that Social Credit had the 
name of being an ‘old man’s party’, 
and perhaps justifiably so, and un- 
less things are done about it, and 
soon, the future may not be too 
bright for this political organiza- 
tion said Dale Enarson, leader of 
the U of A Social Credit club. 


“The involvement of youth in a 
political machine is vital, for it is 
from this group that much of the 
enthusiasm and many of the new 
ideas are derived.” 

“If these are not welcomed, and 
indeed encouraged in one party or- 
ganization, they will go elsewhere 
to expend their energies,” he con- 
tinued. 

Enarson noted Social Credit 
made its initial rise to power as a 


movement among young adults. 
He pointed to Dalton Camp’s vic- 
tory at the Progressive Conserva- 
tive convention as the beginnings 
of a similar triumph. 
GENERATION AHEAD 


Enarson quoted writer Peter 
Neuman as saying if the Tories fol- 
lowed up Camp’s victory, “they 
could find themselves a political 
generation ahead of the Liberals 
and the NDP. 

“This could be an enormous 
electoral advantage, because all 
politicians of all parties will event- 
ually have to win the votes of the 
young—or lose their seats.” 

Enarson also criticized the party 
for allowing itself to be identified 
with religious self - righteous- 
ness. He claimed such a party im- 
age repelled young people. 

Enarson said he was pleased with 
the general change of attitudes 
shown at the convention. 

“This convention seems to have 
set the stage for genuine introspec- 
tion,” he said. 


High bids hurt 


housing plans 


Married students incensed 
at delays in development 


By RONALD YAKIMCHUK 
“We can’t possibly rent houses at this price,” said J. R. B. 
Jones, director of campus planning, after tenders were opened 
last Thursday for the married students housing project. 
A low bid of $5,415,00 was made by Poole Construction Co. 
Ltd. This was $1,165,000 more than the original estimate, “sur- 
prising everyone, including the architect,” according to J. M. 


Whidden, university bursar. 

“The architects did not follow our 
instructions. We asked for a build- 
ing with suites which would rent at 
less than $100 a month,” said Mr. 
Jones. 

“We expected an increase of per- 
haps 10 per cent, but this is ridicu- 
lous.” : 

The architects and the campus 
housing committee will meet this 
week to investigate and study the 
bids and plans. “If no reasonable 
solution is found the whole project 
may be scrapped and started from 
scratch again,” said Mr. Jones. 

The university had planned an 
immediate start on the develop- 
ment so that it would have been 
ready for occupancy by next fall. 
INCENSED 

Meanwhile, married students are 
incensed at delays in construction 
of the development. 

“People had told me in January, 
1965 we would have something by 
September, 1966, or March at the 
latest,” said Burn Evans, a married 
students representative to the cam- 
pus planners. 

“We had approval in principle by 
the cabinet last August. Then the 
administration got hung up on who 
was going to pay for the architect,” 
Evans said. 

“Campus planning then had the 
nerve to ask for a feasibility study. 
After students had been taking 
surveys for two years. They are 
just fiddling around with their bur- 
eaucratic red-tape. 

“I was not surprised that the bids 
were over the estimates. Everyone 
knows that building costs have 
been soaring in the last 18 months. 

“But a rental of more than $100 
is ridiculous. We can get rooms at 
this price anywhere in the city. 
What we actually would like is 
subsidized housing for $60 a month. 


Pro faculties fight SU fees 


By ELAINE VERBICKY 
and BERNIE GOEDHART 
Students’ union fees need to be changed. 
Many students in rehab med, nursing, and 
med and law are dissatisfied with the present 
fee structure. They feel their somewhat iso- 
lated position on campus prevents them from 
taking full advantage of students’ union facili- 


ties. 


“We are definitely not getting our money’s 
worth out of the students’ union,” said Ross 
Langmaid, dental undergraduate society presi- 


dent. 


“We run our own athletic activities within 
the faculty. We are happy with our own year- 
book; we get a lot more from it than from the 


Evergreen and Gold.” 


Dent students pay an extra $12 to the fac- 
ulty with their $34.50 to the students’ union. 

Erik Cragg, dent rep on students’ council, 
said, “The union isn’t relevant. 
little time to make use of the facilities: An 


associate membership is more along the lines 
of what we want.” 


The med students have submitted a brief to 
council asking for reassessment of fees for 
medicine with an alternative of complete 
withdrawal from the students’ union. 

“We get absolutely nothing from students’ 
union programs except intramural sports,” 
said Rick Dewar, med rep. “There is the odd 
fellow interested in religious clubs like VCF.” 


We have so 


see page 2—-CHANGES 


Saskatchewan 
federation 
proposed 


SASKATOON (CUP) — Forma- 
tion of the Saskatchewan Students’ 
Federation was proposed at a meet- 
ing here last weekend. The meeting 
was attended by 20 students of 
post-secondary institutions from 
throughout the province. 


The purpose of the new federa- 
tion would be to have a unified 
voice for all students in the pro- 
vince attending educational insti- 
tutions past the high school level. 
The meeting was told there are ap- 
proximately 25,000 people in Sas- 
katchewan who would be eligible 
for membership. 


Speakers at the two-day con- 
ference included education minister 
George Trapp, university president 
Dr. J. W. T. Spinks, W. G. Davies 
of the Saskatchewan federation of 
labour, and Bill Hamilton of co- 
operative college residences. 


As a result of the meeting a con- 
tinuing committee was formed to 
initiate programs discussed at the 
meeting and to prepare for a gen- 
eral meeting planned for early in 
the new year. The committee con- 
sists of chairman Don Mitchell of © 
Regina, and a representative from 
each post-secondary school in the 
province. 


Mr. Mitchell is president of the 
SRC on the Regina campus. 


Saskatoon campus representative 
on the committee is Lawrence 
Mushka, a fourth year education 
student, and public relations officer 
for the SRC. 


Earlier this year, at the sugges- 
tion of the U of S delegation, the 
western region of the Canadian 
Union of Students was disbanded, 
in favour of establishing provincial 
federations. 

The committee for the new Sas- . 
katchewan federation has been in- 
structed to establish a relationship 
with CUS and to look into the pos- 
sibility of seating a member of the © 
board of directors. 

The committee was also instruct- 
ed to conduct research regarding — 
equality of educational opportunity — 
in the province. In this regard it 
will have access to work already 
done at the university’s Saskatoon 
campus. 

The committee will examine the 
possibility of co-op housing pro- 
jects in order to assist institutions 
with developments of this type. 


meee ct 


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st eee : "eae Aa om “ey = 
‘THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, November 30, 1966 


A one-hour lecture of finding useful 
library materials as quickly as possible 
will be repeated daily at 4:45 p.m. until 
Friday. Those interested should meet 
at the circulation desk, Cameron 
Library. 


TONIGHT 


FEES. COMMISSION 

Today is the final day for any sub- 
missions regarding students’ union fees. 
which must be made in writing and 
turned in at the students’ union office. 
Briefs may be submitted by individuals 
or organizations and may be of any 
length and on any matter relevant to 
students’ union fees. 


WUS 

Branny Schepanovich talks Turkey 
tonight at 8 p.m. in the Lister Hall 
inner lounge. 


WuUSs 

Today is the deadline for applications 
to the World University Service semi- 
nar. For further information contact 
Prof. Neville Linton of the poli sci 


short shorts 


Library lectures 


dept., or Phil Cove, rm. 108 SUB noon 
to 1 p.m. All applications and re- 
ferences sent in to Phil Cove, WUS, 
SUB, U of A, and marked confidential. 


THURSDAY 
DEBATING SOCIETY 
Debating society will debate the 
topic; Resolved that the students’ union 
is a house of straw—Thursday in Din- 
woodie Lounge at 12:30 p.m. Bring 
your lunch. 


CAMPUS DEMOCRATS 

There will be a meeting of the U of 
A Young New Democrats 7:30 p.m. to- 
night in Pybus Lounge, SUB. Speakers 
will be Yvonne Walmsley and Isabel 
Jones on Africa. Both spent last 
summer in Nigeria under the auspices 
of Crossroads Africa. Everyone wel- 
come.. 


RENAISSANCE STUDIES 

There will be a meeting of the Guild 
for Medieval and Renaissance Studies 
8:15 p.m. Thursday at the faculty club. 
Prof. B. N. de Luna, English dept., 


will speak on ‘“Camulodinum: the 
heart of the matter of Britain.” 


INTER-PARTY COMMITTEE 

There will be a meeting of the inter- 
party committee 4:30 p.m. Thursday 
in rm. 108 SUB. Subject: model 
parliament. 


FRIDAY 
STUDENT CINEMA 
Show Friday is Can-Can, with Frank 
Sinatra, Shirley MacLaine and Maurice 
Chevalier, at 7 p.m. in mp 126. Ad- 
mission 35 cents. 


POLISH CLUB 

There will be a general meeting of 
the university Polish club 6 p.m. Friday 
in hot caf. Election of officers and 
coming year’s program planning. 


OT 
MUSICAL CLUB 
There will be a meeting of the 
musical club 8 p.m. Sunday in Con 
Hall. Topic: Folk Music Through the 
Centuries. 


‘ dents. 


SONGFEST ’67 
Songfest '67 will be held at 8 p.m 
Dec. 15 in the Jubilee Auditorium. 


VCF 

The Varsity Christian Fellowship will 
leave SUB 6:15 p.m. Saturday to go to 
the curling party. 


INTERCULTURAL COMMITTEE 

There will be a meeting of the inter- 
cultural committee 4:30 p.m, Tuesday 
in ed 129. Dr. Bernard Gillie, of the 
dept. of Indian affairs and northern 
development will speak on Oppor- 
tunities in Northern Canada. There 
will be a slide showing and a discussion 
period. Everyone interested please 
attend. 


LIBRARY CARDS 

Library cards have now been mailed 
to all students, including graduate, 
undergraduate and evening credit stu- 
Due to errors made during 
registration, such as incomplete listings, 
incomplete addresses, changes in ad- 
dress or late registrations, some stu- 


No one ever said it would be easy. 


. running a hospital with a minimum of 
medical supplies — building a bridge with 
nothing but timber and sweat—teaching a 
child who knows only a strange tongue: But 
that’s what CUSO workers do ... . hundreds 
of them in 35 countries. They meet the chal- 
lenge of a world of inequalities —in educa- 
tion, in technical facilities, in engineering 
and medicine. 

This year, the Canadian University Service 


Overseas ~ a _ non-profit 


non-government 


organization —has already sent 350 young 
volunteers to countries in Asia, in Africa, 


South America and the Caribbean...a 
total of 550 CUSO people altogether in # : 
the field, or about 1 to every 50,000 g 
people who ask for their help. More 
are needed. 

The pay is low... 


. you won’t make a 


profit. Unless you count it profitable to see 
developing nations master new skills and 
new standards of health and science. 
You can’t earn a promotion... but you can 
promote. You will promote new learning, and 
enthusiasm, and a desire to succeed in 
people who are eager to help themselves. 
There are no Christmas bonuses . . . but you 
earn a bonus every day in the response of 
the people you work and live with. And you'll 
be amazed at how quickly you'll find an op- 
portunity to develop your ideas, your dreams. 
Willing to work to build a better world? 


CUSO 


The Canadian Peace Corps 


Here’s just the job for you. 
How do you apply? Get more informa- 
tion and application forms from local 
CUSO representatives at any Canadian 
university, or from the Executive Sec- 
retary of CUSO, 151 Slater St., Ottawa. 


to be held to help lost students 


dents have not received their cards. 
Inquire at the circulation desk Cameron 
Library, if you have not yet received 
your embossed plastic card. Students 
can obtain cards immediately from 
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday. 


MIXED CHORUS 

The U of A mixed chorus will meet 
in ag 345 at 7 p.m. Dec. 12 before going 
to the university hospital for carolling. 


TREASURE VAN 

Sign up for a two-hour shift as staff 
for Treasure Van on sheets around 
campus or contact Dale Enarson at 
433-5651. Special help needed for 
Thursday and Friday evenings., The 
sale will take place noon to 10 p.m. 
next Monday to Friday. 


UN CLUB 

UNICEF Christmas cards will be on 
sale weekdays to Dec. 16 in SUB from 
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Money for under- 
privileged children. 


WUS 

World University Service is in need 
of a director for its annual Share cam- 
paign. Share supports the WUS inter- 


national aid program to developing 
universities in Africa, Asia, South 
America. 


TELEPHONE BOOKS 

Telephone directories can be picked 
up in the students’ union office upon 
presentation of your ID card. 


Math prof dies 
of heart attack 


Dr. Eoin Laird Whitney, 46, 
associate professor of mathematics 
and computing science, died Nov. 
21, 


He suffered a heart attack as he 
was entering the math department 
offices in Campus Towers. 

He was born in Toronto, Ontario 
in 1920. Graduating with a BSc in 
mathematics from the U of A in 
1948, he then continued his studies 
at Harvard, receiving his PhD in 
1955. 

He was first appointed to the 
staff at U of A in 1957 as an 
assistant professor, and was pro- 


‘moted to associate professor in 


1959. 

One hour before his death, Dr. 
Whitney had driven his wife to 
hospital where she gave birth to 
their fifth son only an hour before 
her husband’s death. 

The academic secretary of the 
math department, Dr. T. M. Fost- 
vedt, described Dr. Whitney as “a 
mathematician’s mathematican” 
who was “well liked by his col- 
leagues”. 

“The death was not a complete 
surprise, as he had had two pre- 
vious heart attacks,’ added Dr. 
Fostvedt. 


Changes 


from page 1 


He said med students isolate 
themselves from the rest of the 
campus. 

“As long as med students are 
undergrads, they should pay full 
fees. 

“But we feel we should be classi- 
fied as grad students,” he added. 

Granton Patrick, law 2, said, even 
though he, as a married student, 
doesn’t make full use of the facili- 
ties, $34.50 is a reasonable fee. 

He suggested law students have 
no real reason to complain and 
added, “the ones who sound off 
have nothing better to do. If they 
would look at things in perspective 
and reality, they’d have nothing to 
say.” 

“The long-time complaint that 
we are not getting full value from 
fees was effectively rebutted at the 
last law students association meet- 
ing. It was pointed out if we didn’t 
pay fees, law students would have 
no rights in campus government.” 

A students’ union investigation 
committee is looking into com- 
plaints. ef ; > 


LoNFORMULABT § 


—Perry Afaganis photo 


ONE DONATION WORKS MANY WONDERS—As youve 
probably guessed by the above slogan, you’re being asked to 


give again. 


doubt already given a pint, but go ahead and give again. 


Since blood drive started Monday, you've no 


Give 


three, four or even five times; it’s all in a good cause. 


Schepanovich backs 
dismissal at McGill 


Students’ council executive 
members had mixed reactions 
about the firing of McGill Daily 
editor Sandy Gage in Montreal on 
Noy. 17. 

President Branny Schepanovich 
said “If in fact there has been a 
violation of the CUP charter and 
code of ethics, then the McGill 
council has my complete and un- 
qualified support of its actions. 

‘Ym happy to see the McGill 
council stand up and face the 
blackmail tactic of mass resignation. 
I hope the CUP investigation com- 
mission uncovers all the facts.” 

The news story which resulted in 
Gage’s firing claimed a McGill 
university professor was aiding the 
Viet Nam war by working on a 
project designed to determine soil 
solidity from the air. The story 
has not been denied by the pro- 
fessor himself. 


PURELY EDITORIAL 

Commenting on the headline of 
the story, “Researcher Aids Viet 
War,” Schepanovich said: “I think 
the first statement is purely edi- 
torial comment with no basis what- 
ever in the story. 

“It’s a violation of a good code 
of ethics. The lead is sloppy and 
irresponsible, and irresponsibility 
is sufficient grounds for firing an 
editor.” 

“If the same thing happened at 
U of A, “I would brand that as 
yellow journalism and call an in- 
vestigation,” Schepanovich said. 

When asked about his role con- 


Sd 


cerning The Gateway, he said: “I 
have only the role of publisher— 
one of informal supervision. The 
Gateway also exercises the same 
rare and control over coun- 
cil.” 

When asked why the clause 
which states that The Gateway 
“shall not be an instrument of 
social change” was deleted from 
union by-laws, he replied: “It had 
too wide a meaning to have any 
value. 


“It is sometimes necessary for 
The Gateway to be an instrument 
of social change. 


MARXIST 


“I thing the phraseology was de- 
finitely of Marxist origin,” he said. 


“Students’ council is neither left 
nor right—it’s straight ahead.” 

Vice-president Marilyn Pilking- 
ton, when asked about the McGill 
firing, said: “It was an unfortunate 
thing to have happen. I don’t 
know why an investigation wasn’t 
called before he was fired. 

“I think papers have a respons- 
ibility to act in the best interest of 
their students’ councils,” she said. 

Before an editor can be fired at 
U of A, a CUP investigation com- 
mission has to be called in because 
council adopted this procedure in 
its by-laws. 

Students’ council at McGill didn’t 
adopt the resolution passed at the 
CUS conference in Halifax that en- 
sures a complete CUS-CUP in- 
vestigation before any editor can 
be fired. 


_ THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, November 30,1966 3g 


CUS-man holds 


non-existent post 


Is he campus Canadian Union of 
Students’ chairman? 

Maybe he is the external affairs 
chairman. 

But again he may just be Owen 
Anderson, a private university 
student. 

No one really knows for sure, but 
one thing is certain: Owen Ander- 
son has been voting on student 
council. 

The conflict over Anderson’s 
position has arisen since U of A 
withdrew from CUS two months 
ago. At that time the students’ 
union put off changing the con- 
stitution (to legally withdraw U 
of A from CUS) until students vote 
in a referendum in March. 

Anderson’s title was changed 
from CUS chairman to external 
affairs .chairman. He _ retained 
council voting privileges and is 
expected to carry out the same 
duties as he did as CUS chairman. 
And although he is now called ex- 
ternal affairs chairman, he is still 
CUS chairman according to the 
constitution. 

As the constitution now stands, 


we are required to have a CUS 
chairman. Nothing is said about 
belonging to CUS. : 

SIX WEEKS 

As constitutional changes take 
six weeks to enact, the council has 
bypassed legally changing Ander- 
son’s position, 

Anderson wants to see the con- 
stitution changed to have the ex- 
ternal affairs chairman made a fifth 
member of the council executive. 

If, in the future, U of A rejoins 
CUS, the CUS chairman then 
would be under the external af- 
fairs chairman. 

Anderson said if anyone wants 
to challenge his right to vote, they 
could probably start constitutional 
changes immediately. 

The red tape required to change 
the constitution is incredible. It 
takes six weeks to enact an con- 
stitutional change. If after the 
referendum in March, the students 
wish to rejoin CUS, the con- 
stitution would again have to be 
changed. After this, an election 
for CUS chairman would have to 
be held. 


FORD MOTOR CO. 
OF CANADA, LIMITED 


invites YOU to meet its 
representative on campus 


December 1st, 1966 


GRADUATING SENIORS 


ARTS, COMMERCE 
ENGINEERING, SCIENCE 


Learn what FORD can 
offer YOU 


Arrangements for interviews can be made and > 
further information obtained at the Student 
Placement office at 11149 - 91 Avenue 


(rece cess, 
(Orerconcces® 


BOOKS FOR 
CHRISTMAS 


A selection of some of our 
sumptuous books, all at very 
un-sumptuous prices. 


Painting in Canada, by J. Russell 
Harper (curator, McCord Museum, 
McGill). A beautifully produced, 
definitve history, 378 illustrations, 
many in color, Centennial Project 
of the U of T Press. $19.00 


Landmarks of the World’s Art 
series, colorful, well written and 
produced. The Classical World, 
Prehistoric and Primitive Man, The 
Modern World, The Age of Baro- 
que, other titles. Published by Paul 
Hamlyn, Limited and McGraw- 
Hall. $6.80 each. 


The Story of Art, by E. H. Gomb- 
rich. One of the Phaidon Press’s 
remarkably thorough art books, 
newly revised, 384 illustrations, 
many in color. $7.15. 


History of Art, by H. W. Janson 
(New York University). Surveys 
the “major visual arts from the 
dawn of history to the present day.” 
848 gravure illustrations, over 70 
color plates. $11.25. 


A Treasury of the Theatre, edited 
by John Gassner. A well-chosen 
anthology that encompasses 
Aeschylus, Sophocles, Shakespeare, 
Moliere, Ibsen, Shaw, Synge, Mil- 
ler, Ionesco and many more. Three 
voumes, each $8.90. 


Marivaux, by E. J. H. Greene, 
(Head, Romance Languages, U of 
A). A critical study of the entire 
body of Marivaux’s writings— 
novels, essays, plays. $8.10. ; 


Sunrise to Starlight, an anthology 
of man’s day in prose and poetry, 
compiled. by May Detherage. An 
attractively illustrated and bound 
bedside book of short readings and 
bits of wisdom. $5.25. 


Anthology of Children’s Literature, 
compiled by Edna Johnson et al. 
Almost 1,300 pages of delightful 
reading and story-telling, including 
Mother Goose and Aesop, national 
folk tales, Rudyard Kipling, Christ- 
ina Rossetti, Lewis Carroll, Robert 
Louis Stevenson and Mark Twain 
and more. Illustrated. $10.25. 


The Great Canadian Lover, and 
other commentaries and conceits, 
by Mervyn J. Huston, 

Dean of Pharmacy at U of A_ .$3.35. 


Anyone Can Make A Million, by 
Morton Schulman. The _ season’s 
most famous how-to- book by the 
Toronto coroner and part-time fin- 
ancial whiz. $5.65. 


Antiques You Can Decorate With, 
by George Grotz. Practical guide to 
what’s available, where to get it, 
and what to pay. Illustrated. $5.65. 


Amy Vanderbilt’s New Complete 
Book of Etiquette. Far more than 
a guide about not slurping the soup, 
there are few social situations or 
protocol matters that this 700-page 
book does not touch. $6.90. 


We've also a great collection of — 
prints and art reproductions 

that make fine gifts, and lots . 
of University Christmas cards. — 


THE BOOKSTORE 


University of Alberta 


member of the canadian university press 


= editor-in-chief - - - - bill miller 
_ managing editor—ralph melnychuk associate editor—helene chomiak 


news editor conus lorraine minich casserole editor ..... . brian campbell 
_ sports editor ... richard vivone photo editor .... neil driscoll 
_makeup editor ... ee act FOR. Wil production manager ... jim rennie 


EDITORIAL—Desk—tLawrie Hignell, Doug Bell, Frank Horvath, Gordon Auck; Cup Editor—Darla Campbell; 
Cartoonists—Dale Drever, Peter Bassek; ne aoe Lewko, Ann Bergstrom; Editorial Board—Bil 
Miller, Ralph Melnychuk, Helene Chomiak, Brian Campbell. 
STAFF THIS ISSUE—Only a few of the faithful came to laugh at the hat but those that did were Bernie 
(another good game) Goedhart, Elaine (fedora) Verbicky, John Thompson, Bob Jacobsen, W. W. P. Burns, 
Teri Turner, Dave Sutherland, Al Yackulic, Forrest Bard, Ron Yakimchuk, Marion (—and coke) Conybeare, 
Popsicle Pete and yours truly Harvey Thomgirt. 
The Gateway is published semi-weekly by the students’ union of the University of Alberta. The Editor-in- 
Chief is responsible for all material published herein. Final copy deadline: for Wednesday edition—7 p.m. 
_ Sunday, advertising—noon Thursday prior, short shorts—5 p.m. Friday; for Friday edition— 7 p.m. Tuesday, 
advertising—noon Monday prior; short shorts—5 p.m. Tuesday. asserole advertising—noon Thursday 
previous week. Advertising Manager: Peter Amerongen. Office Phone—433-1155. irculation—9,300. 


Authorized as second-class mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment of postage in 


cash. Postage paid at Edmonton. 


PAGE FOUR 


WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1966 


the housing dilemma 


The tenders opened last week for 
the married students housing pro- 
ject turned out to be more than 27 
per cent, or $1,165,000, over the 
architects’ estimates. 


So what else is new? 


Almost without exception, tend- 
ers opened for construction of new 
buildings on this campus in the past 
few years have been more than the 
architects estimated. 


Now the architects and the cam- 
pus housing committee are meeting 
to investigate and study the bids 
and plans. Campus planning dir- 
ector J. R. B. Jones has indicated 
that if no reasonable solution is 
found, the project may start from 
scratch—again. 


How nice. The bureaucrats will 
look at the nice plans, then send 
them back to the nice men in the 
architects’ office, who will then 
make some more nice plans, and 
send them back to the bureaucrats, 
who, if they like the plans, will send 
them out to the nice construction 
outfits, asking for tenders for the 
nice buildings. 


But this takes time, and time is of 
the essence. Another delay of 18 
months or so will do nothing for the 
married students who are tired of 
waiting for reasonably-priced ac- 
commodations relatively close to the 
university. 


If the campus planning commit- 
tee asks the architects to trim costs, 
the architects will cut out the 
luxury items such as soundproof 
walls and quality finishing and the 
married students will end up with an 


No changes COME 


We wish to congratulate Dale 
Enarson qn his recent ‘‘success’’ at 
the Social Credit convention. 


Much of what he said, once the 
traditional Social Credit propaganda 
was weeded out, was very intelli- 
gent. It is gratifying to know that 
at least some members of the Social 
Credit party are able to conceive of 
a society somewhat more complex 
than that of 1935. 

However, Mr. Enarson must be- 
ware lest the recent national pub- 
‘licity he has received goes to his 
head. 

Newspapermen often are more 
acute listeners at political conven- 
tions than are politicians. Those of 


abortion such as the Lister Hall 
residence complex. 


Items such as soundproofing may 
sound superfluous, but have you 
ever tried to study when the kid next 
door is screaming his bloody head 
cff? Items such as these are es- 
sential in student housing, and for 
the reason cited above, especially in 
married ‘student housing. 


If the architects remove these 
items, the whole project loses some- 
thing, that something that would 
otherwise keep the tenancy rate 
near to 100 per cent. Married stu- 
dents should want to live in the con- 
fines of the project, and cutting 
construction costs by using cheaper 
quality materials will not induce 
them to do so. 

The project must get off the 
ground immediately. Start con- 
struction now, using the present 
plans, selecting one of those bids 
submitted last week. 

If the university waits for new 
plans, the cost of construction will 
rise again as it has for the past 18 
months and bids will again be 
greater than the estimates. 

The university planning commit- 
tee should get out of this vicious 
circle now. Get going on some of 
these projects that have been held 
up because of high bids. 

Waiting for a change in construc- 
tion costs does not help, as the costs 
just keep on going up. 

Asking architects to trim costs 
does not help either, as the concept 
of the building must be changed, or 
the quality must be reduced. 

Get going—the cost will be 
higher tomorrow. 


overnight 


us who have attended political con- 
ventions are aware of the attitudes 
of ‘’the pros’’. They pat us on the 
head, tell us how glad they are to 
see ‘’the youth’’, and then ignore us 
when we present our ideas. 


Mr. Enarson, therefore, should 
not expect to change the Social 
Credit party overnight. In fact, Mr. 
Enarson’s audience sounds suspici- 
ously like the regular convention- 
goers, who may be locally known, 
but certainly do not wield influence 
in the party. : 

We applaud Mr. Enarson’s noble 
efforts to reform Social Credit, but 
we feel he would be more successful 
if he joined another political party. 


nb hy 


cl oY 


ignere pie. 


“maybe we put too much faith in paperwork” 


richard vivone 


the university | 
should care 


There is a sad tale told that the 
Eastern Canadian cities are not as 
friendly as those in the west. They 
say a person could die on a street 
corner in Montreal and people would 
simply step over the corpse. Maybe 
even take the effort to rudely kick it 
off the sidewalk. 

Yes, my friend told me, they are 
not a philanthropic lot down there. 
They even fight over college hockey 
players. Can you imagine such a sin? 

Well Ed Enos, athletic director of 
Loyola University of Montreal can 
imagine it. Some of his hockey play- 
ers saw the almighty dollar flashed be- 
fore them and they grabbed at it. 
The players left the Loyola campus 
and accepted the money. 

But Enos is a scrapper. Throw a 
fight his way and he will not back- 
pedal. He just spits in the old mitts 
and invites all comers. 

Mr. Enos feels his students should 
do their hockey playing in a Loyola 
uniform. 

So when three of his players handed 
in their gear and suited up with a local 
squad that offered greenbacks, Ed saw 
red. But he didn’t only do that, he 
did something  positive—he took 
action. 

The three players were told to 
either quit the local team or not play 
at all. 

“This is not an athletic department 
ruling,’’ explained Enos. ‘‘It’s purely 
a matter of academics. According 
to the Dean’s office, the school put 
this rule in several years ago to ensure 
a boy’s academic development. Any- 
thing that would jeopardize this de- 
velpment is taboo,”’ 

“'There is no selfishness on our part 
about this,’’ he said. ‘In fact we are 
being quite liberal. Our ruling doesn’t 
specify that the boy has to play for 
the school. It only states that while 


he attends Loyola he cannot play for 
an outside team. If a boy wants to 
play for an outside team that badly, 
he can always decide to pull out of 
Loyola and go elsewhere.” 

Enos further more pointed out that 
each student is made aware of the 
ruling in the fall hockey meeting and 
when he enrolls. 

Art Kennedy, general manager of 
the local team in Montreal doesn’t see 
it that way. 

‘'The school must be bluffing. 1 
don’t see how they can make a boy 
leave college just because he wants to 
play junior hockey. What a student 
does in his spare time is none of the 
school’s business. {t's =a l6t of 
baloney.” 

One of the boys took Enos at his 


“word and returned to school and the 


hockey team. Two games later, the 
player told Floyd Curry of the Mont- 
real junior Canadiens that he never 
knew hockey could be so much fun. 

A little further researching brought 
the problem closer to home. The Uni- 
versity of Manitoba has a reserve 
clause in their student calendar. 

It reads: 

“No student eligible to compete 
in any intercollegiate contest shall 
represent a non-college club or or- 
ganization during the college term’ 
unless released by the members of the 
WCIAA concerned; but this shall not 
be interpreted to prevent a student 
from representing a non-college club 
during the long vacation.” 

You can debate long and hard 


_ about whether or not personal rights 


are involved; whether the rules violate 
the democratic principles of freedom 
and so on. 

But the hint is overpowering. 
Some universities care what their stu- 
dents do. They do east of Alberta, 
anyway. 


mencken. 


the university. 


‘the volume of mail that comes into a magazine or 
newspaper is no idex of anything except that you 
happen to attract a lot of idiots, because most people 
that write letters to newspapers are fools’—h. I. 
today, letter writers write about policy 
_statments, noisy student, the ndp, and the seminar on 


NN 


letters 


a clear-cut policy 


Because a number of individuals 
have requested a clear-cut policy 
statement from my office, | have 
consented to issue such a statement, 
which follows: 

Eric Hoffer tells us that ‘a nation 
declines when its people become too 
serious and reasonable, and refuse 
to set their hearts on toys.” 

And Norman Brown says that 
“wisdom is wit; in play, not in work; 
in freedom, not is necessity. A vast 
pun, as in dreams, in the neologisms 
of schizophrenia, in ‘Finnegan‘s 
Wake,’ in the Old Testament pro- 
phets . . . the God of Delphi, who 
always spoke the truth, never gave a 
straight answer, in the upright Pro- 
testant way; he always spoke in 
riddles, im parables; ambiguities, 
temptations; that hearing they might 
hear and not understand. The real 
deceivers are the literalists, who say, 
! cannot tell a lie.’ 

Or, as in Barfield, ‘’the newness 
is the metaphor, or nonsense—say- 
ing one thing and meaning another.’ 

The original sense is nonsense; 
and common sense a cover-up job. 
Nothing wrong, except the refusal 
to play. ‘Sleepers awake.” ‘ 

The rest is silence. 

owen anderson 
cus chairman 


quiet, please 

It is apparent that an irritating 
number of ‘students’ at this uni- 
versity have not yet learned that a 
library is not a frat house, etc. 

Although it would be unreason- 
able for a student to expect complete 
quiet while studying in Cameron 
Library, a certain amount of quiet is 
reasonable. 


However, this is not the case. 
Even though there are smoking 
rooms, lunchrooms, rotundas and 


other areas provided away from the 
reading and study areas, these ‘’stu- 
dents’’ cannot contain their loud 
noises, continuous, lengthy talking, 
loud laughter and other loud 
noises. Asking them to be quiet, 
please, results in louder laughter. 
As a result | am appealing to 

these ‘’students.’’ Would you please 
show some consideration for the 
other students and if you must be 
loud would you please leave the 
study area? And if there is not 
room in the areas provided, | am 
quite sure there is ample space at 
the city zoo,.in cages where you 
belong.’ 

dale stringer 

arts 2 


don’t bore us 

Ralph Melnychuk suggested in a 
column in The Gateway the only 
alternative to the present Social 
Credit government is the NDP. As 
a Liberal, | must strongly disagree. 

The NDP has failed to win votes 
in any agricultural area of Canada. 

They have lost the agrarian base 
of the CCF, but have not gained 
their expected labor vote. In one 
of Alberta’s most 
constituencies, Edson, their leader 
was defeated by a Liberal candidate. 

It was a Liberal member, Bill 
Dickie, who brought to the floor of 
the legislature the question of the 
recent Lethbridge university appoint- 
ments. This was a direct result of 
action of the Campus Liberals, fol- 
_ lowing up The Gateway’s story on 
the issue. : 


- 


labor-dominated © 


Surely Mr. Melnychuk should re- 


cognize this as the action of a- 


serious opposition, concerned with 
the problems of the people of AI- 
berta, and willing to respond to 
complaints from young people. 

At a recent post-morten of Mr. 
Turcott, the socialist Eric Neilson, it 
was suggested. that even Gerda 
Munsinger could not embarass Mr. 
Manning—she, not the premier, 
would be blamed for any hanky- 
panky. the NDP might discover. 

If the NDP are honestly concern- 
ed with the problems of Albertans, 
let them raise these questions in the 
housé and cease to bore us with 
four-year-old, unproven gossip. 

Mr. Manning’s government must 
be defeated. It can only be defeat- 
ed on its policy. When it is defeat- 
ed, the party to do so will be the 
porty that has provided responsible 
and effective opposition, the Liberal 
perty of Alberta. 

gerald |. ohlsen 
arts 4 


more responsibility 


1 am sorry to see your already 
not-too-distinguished columns have 


descended to echoing the Edmonton - 


Journal. 1 refer particularly to “A 
Choice for Alberta,’’ Nov. 23. 

Please allow me to correct the 
emphasis in this article by quoting 
from Garth Turcott’s speech to the 
legislature Nov. 18: 

“Mr. Speaker, if these charges are 
substantiated, then the minister 
must indeed resign, and if they are 
not substantiated then proper action 
should be taken against the author 
of these charges—but in either case, 
Mr. Speaker, | submit that at present 
the minister takes his seat in this 
house under a cloud, and the matter 
must be resolved in this house with- 
out further delay.’’ 

Note that he did not accuse Mr. 
Hooke of anything. He _ simply 
pointed out that the charges, which 
had been made current by, among 
others, Senator Harper Prowse and 
alderman Ed Leger, were serious and 
should be denied or confirmed. 

In so saying, Mr. Turcott was in 
good company; the Dorion report 
stated the general principle that 


. when a minister of the crown has 


impropriety imputed to him, it is up 
to the minister himself to clear his 
name. 

Mr. Turcott asks no more than 
this: that Mr. Hooke display suf- 
ficient sense of responsibility towards 
the people of Alberta that he clear 
himself of any suggestion of con- 
flict of interest. The NDP member 


was not conducting a smear cam- 
paign; rather, he was reviewing the 
position of minister of the crown as 


entailing more responsibility than 
Mr. Hooke seems inclined to associ- 
ate with it. 
rozanne thomson 
arts | 


it’s not the left 


Ever true to the traditions and 
principles of that most respected of 
all media, The Gateway Friday rock- 
ed the academic community with an 
expose of campus activism. Thanks 
to an acutely sensitive hearing 
aparatus, the ‘’slow, grating noise 
of revolution’’ and the true extent 
of the activist conspiracy have been 
r2vealed to the campus at large and 
the impending catastrophe either 
averted or accelerated. 

While | am pleased The Gateway 
considers the Seminar on the Uni- 
versity such a newsworthy item as to 
rate front’ page coverage | would 
like to clear up a few of the mis- 
leading impressions created as a re- 
sult of some rather obvious edi- 
torializing in what is presented as a 
news feature. 

Firstly, the Seminar is not the arm 
of any “amorphous group’ nor is it 
a part. of any other conspiracy of 
“‘new left activism.’ The Seminar 
was conceived and organized long 
before the evolution of either the 
Pro-CUS committee of the Campus 
Involvement Association. 

As was explicitly pointed out to 
your reporter the Seminar develop- 
ed as a result of discussions towards 
the end of the last academic year 
and there is no connection, either 
formally or informally, between the 
Seminar and the two conspiracies to 
overthrow our de jure student union 
government, namely the CIA and 
the Pro-CUS group. 

Secondly, |! object to being label- 
led, categorized or otherwise pigeon- 
holed (for the convenience of The 
Gateway and others who delight to 
indulge in such a _ meaningless 
hobby) as ‘’part of a new left activ- 
ism‘’. True, this group is dedicated 
by its very nature to activism, that 
is to causing something to be done 
as oposed to passiveness, a state or 
quality of inaction, non-action, not 
acting but acted upon. 

However, neither is the group 
opposed to ‘‘pacifism’’ (peace) and 
nor does it necessarily subscribe to 
it. On the other hand we would 
like very much to be allowed to 
conduct our discussions in a 
“pacific’’ atmosphere as it would 
seem to be more conducive to our 
examination and evaluations. of the 
academic community. Therefore, | 
would plead with you not to declare 
war upon us and thus thwart our 
legitimate aspirations. 

Thirdly, | object to the insinuation 
of an impending confrontation be- 


tween Provost Ryan and the “new — 


lefters’’ at the next session of the 
Seminar. Surely, it must be ad- 
mitted that both a liberal and a 
conservative, in the political as well 
as the philosophical senses of the 
words, may well find that they have 
a common denominator in recogniz- 
ing that there is ‘something wrong 
with the system’’. It may not even 
be too improbable that they should 
decide that a mutual examination of 
the system would be a _ valuable 
beginning. 

That is not to imply that they 
would necessarily agree on ap- 
proaches or solutions nor even that 
they would agree on the extent, 
scope, or ambit of the problems. 
However, this is an approach that 
we have been using in the Seminar 
and |! believe that it has the 
potential of yielding valuable results. 

barrie chivers 
law 2 


seminarian speaks 

The Seminar on the University, 
as reported in The Gateway Friday, 
is one of a number of seminars 
initiated, but not strictly controlled, 
by the Student Christian Movement 
fer the study of topics important to 
the university community. 

This Seminar is concerned with 
‘the university’. It was intended 
to provide the occasion for an 
examination of the problems of 
modern universities, and of this uni- 
versity in particular, by students, 
teachers, and administrators, talk- 
ing and working together. It was 
to be open to all shades of opinion, 
to encourage honest questioning, to 
get at relevant facts, and to foster 
understanding of differing positions 
and attitudes. 

It is known that universities today 
fcce great problems and that many 
of their members are dissatisfied 
and disturbed. It was hoped these 
discontents, their causes and their 
possible remedies, might be more 
clearly identified than ' they had 
been, and that representatives of the 
various constituencies of the uni- 
versity might come to know each 
other’s problems and views and even 
to reach agreement on many matters 
which might seem to be in issue. 

We believe that in the meetings 
held so far, some progress has been 
made towards these ends. On the 
understanding: that in their discus- 
sions responsible people would work 
sincerely to learn and to understand, 
teachers, administrators and stu- 
dents have met together, in good 
faith and in good temper. We be- 
lieve they have found in their meet- 
ings an atmosphere conducive to 
frank and mature discussion. They 
have spoken to each other; what is 
better, they have listened to each 
other. 

We must not claim too much for 
the program, which is really only 
begun. However, we can say that 
many of those taking part in the 
Seminar have displayed the attitudes 
or qualities just mentioned, and 
learned their value. Surely it would 


- not be prejudging the nature of a 


university to suggest that a seminar 
which does not itself show that it 
appreciates these qualities is_ ill- 
fitted to consider the topic it has 
undertaken to study. 

That is why we are so disturbed 
by the suggestion in your article that 
the seminar is the tool of a faction, 
impressed only by one set of 
opinions, hostile to other views, and 
anxious only to promote contention. 
Such assertions are false. We hope 
they never become true. If they 
should, the Seminar, as first con- 


1 oA 
ENT 
YWINE INSTRLME 
will strike you down: 


Qos 


y) 
/) 


Tal 
ne 


(, mesthe 


Ins Panent 


ole beertruck 
rat under 
slightly myopic 
yi om 
loa ow 
we rophet 
(oho incite 
heverlives to 
see hits ontaqons 
die a cick hh, 
Resper: 
member 


his community). 


ceived and as so far conducted, will 
have failed and determined. Cer- 
tainly it could not then continue _ 
under the sanction of its original 
sponsors. 

It is true that some of those tak- 
ing part in the Seminar are also 
active in the new CIA and the other 
organizations your article mentioned. 
That is unavoidable given the open 
character of the seminar, natural, 
considering the interest of these per- 
sons in their community, and cer- 
tainly not undesirable, in view of our 
wish to have a broad range of views 
represented. It would be wrong only 
if the Seminar were to be subverted 
by anyone group, and twisted into 
the service of narrow and factional 
interests. This has not happened, 
and we hope and have reason to be- 
lieve that the integrity of the 
Seminar will continued to be re- 
spected. 

It is also true that some persons 
now attending the Seminar (provok- 
ed, perhaps, by the questions and 
proposals raised in it) might carry 
on, individually or in groups, to take 
what they regard as appropriate 
action to deal with problems as they 
see them. After all, ideas do have 
consequences; otherwise, why are we 
here? However, in so acting, such 
persons will represent only them- 
selves: or the nominate groups for 
which they may speak. They will 
not be agents of the SCM or the 
Seminar on the University. 

We hope that the confusion en- 
gendered by your article will not 
jeopardize the future of an under- 
taking which promises to be of value 
to this university, nor discourage the 
participation in the Seminar of those 
from all elements of the University 
whose co-operation is needed to 
assure its success. ; 

donna petrosky 
scm co-ordinator 


compulsory membership 


We have learned that the stu- 
dents’ union membership investiga- 
tion committee is attempting to justi- 
fy a system of compulsory mem- 
bership fees for all students. At 
present all undergraduates are com- 
pelled to pay fees levied by the stu- 
dents’ union and the university ath- 
letic board. 

We wish to register our strong dis- 
agreement with this move. On the 
basis of our Christian convictions we 
are opposed to robbing anyone of his 
constitutional right to freedom of as- 
sociation. 

We do not favor any form of 
compulsory membership. 

Compulsion of this kind violates 
one of the basic rights and freedoms 
laid down in the Canadian Bill of 
Rights. We are in wholehearted 
agreement with this document when 
it asserts that “’ . . . the Canadian 
nation is founded upon principles 
that acknowledge the supremacy of 
God, the dignity and worth of the 
human person and the position of 
the family in a society of free men 
and free institutions.” 

We urge all who are members of 
this committee to consider the con- 
tents of this letter and to see to it 
that the method of collecting fees is 
a matter of choice. The least that 
should be done is to provide a clause 
granting freedom from membership 
for the conscientious objector. Asa 
token of our good faith in this mat- 
ter we would contribute each year 
the equivalent of our membership - 
fees to an organization such as the 
Red Cross. 


chris gort, 

fred cupido, 
wytze brouwer, 
george gillespie 


ivine 


e form 


‘THE GATEWAY, Wadsestag: oe 30, 1966 


Weekend victories set stage 


tor Bear-Bison 


By RICHARD VIVONE 
Gateway Sports Editor 


CALGARY—You win some, you 
lose some and some are rained out. 
But the Dinnies didn’t win. Hockey 
games are never rained out. That 
leaves only losing. 


The University of Alberta Gold- 
en Bears squeaked by the Univer- 
sity of Calgary Dinosaurs 5-4 Fri- 
day and stormed back for a 10-0 
whomping Saturday afternoon at 
Foothills Arena. 

The latter win exactly enumer- 
ated the Bears record against the 
Dinnies in their brief three year 


HUGH WADDLE 
.-. master of zip 


history. The series was the open- 
ing of the WCIAA season for Al- 
berta but the second time the Din- 
nies have dropped both ends of a 
weekend series. They lost twice to 
Manitoba earlier. 

The stage is now set for the an- 
nual first place battle in Winnipeg 
against Manitoba this weekend. 

Friday’s encounter has to be one 
of the worst Golden Bear perform- 


encounter 


ances in recent memory—the first 
two periods anyway. Obviously a 
shade overconfident, the Bears 
stood around and swapped jokes 
while the Dinnies piled up a 3-1 
lead early in the second period. The 
required number of goals tied the 
count by 5:30 of the third period 
and lit the lights for Ron Cebryk’s 
winner at 5:45. 


CEBRYK GETS WINNER 


Cebryk, one of the better Bears 
that night, consummated his work- 
manlike effort by stealing the puck 
and putting the decisive goal on the 
scoreboard. 


The product of the now defunct 
junior Bears described the goal 
this way. “The defenceman figured 
he was going to beat me. I just lift- 
ed his stick and took it away.” 


From the opening minutes of the 
game, it appeared the Bears were 
intent on playing Santa Claus early. 
The two first period Calgary goals 
were outright gifts and the Dinnie 
tally in the second had “garbage” 
written all over it. The Bears 
checking ranged from _ lacka- 
daisical to nonexistent. 


Calgary goals by Al Scott at 4:01 
and Rod White at 10:16 were 
almost identical. Shots from the 
point were knocked down and left 
laying around in front of the Bear 
goal. Bob Wolfe generously pull- 
ed the puck out of the net on both 
occasions. 


BEARS TRAIL 


Gerry Braunberger, after miss- 
ing several fine chances, scored at 
15:23. First period score—Bears 1, 
Calgary 2. 

The Dinnies went two goals up at 
the 21 second mark of the second 
period on Dennis Peterson’s low 
shot. 

The game wasn’t going too well 
for the Bears at this point. Then 
Calgary received two minor penal- 
ties within 30 seconds. Coach 
Drake paraded his five top guns 
to the firing line and their total 
contribution was a penalty to Ralph 
Jorstad. 

It appeared the writing was on 
the wall stamped there indelibly in 
gronk lingo—lingo characterized by 


try. 


graduates, 


Opportunities in the 
PIPELINE INDUSTRY 


Producers Pipelines Ltd., Regina, 
offers challenging employment to En- 
gineering graduates in a growing indus- 


Company representatives will visit 
the campus on December 9, 1966, to in- 
terview prospective 1967 Engineering 


Direct contact may be made with 
the Company by writing: 


. Personnel Manager 
Producers Pipelines Ltd. 
2240 Albert Street 
Regina, Saskatchewan 


x ere 


ve 


PHlockey pate whomp winless Dinnies - as usual 


IT GETS HARDER EVERY YEAR 
. . . but poor old Dinos always manage to lose 


rugged, hustling workmanlike ef- 
forts. But the Bears had some 
trouble reading the stuff and here 
is what happened afterwards. 


BEARS CATCH UP 


Hugh Twa narrowed the margin 
to one goal at 14:45 of the second 
period. Brian Harper went to work 
and tied the game early in the third 
stanza but Dinnie’s Rocky Brassard 
hauled them one tally up at 4:11. 

Harper continued his victory 
campaign with another tying effort 
at 5:30 and opened the curtains and 
floodlights for Cebryk’s winner. 

The Bear resurgence in that third 
period was best illustrated on the 
charts. In total shots directed at 
the goal which includes deflections 
and misaimed ones, the Bears out- 
did Calgary 32-12. 

In actual saves, Wolfe blocked 26 
compared to 38 for Calgary’s Don 
Vosburgh. 


BEARS—10, CALGARY—zip! 


Perhaps a little sickened at the 
prospect of having almost lost to 
the talentless Dinosaurs, the Bears 
fired eight third period goals to 
thump Calgary by ten goals. 

Goaler Hugh Waddle, never 
overworked at any point of the 
contest, registered his second shut- 
out over the Dinnies in two years. 


' EDMONTON PUBLIC 
SCHOOL BOARD 


TEACHING APPOINTMENTS 
EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 1967 


Each year the Edmonton 
Public School Board offers 
an increasing number of 
teaching appointments to 
students attending the 
University of Alberta. 


Appointments are avail- 
able at all grade levels and 
in all subject specialties. 
Representatives of the Board 
will be available on campus 
Tuesdays and Fridays to in- 
terview applicants. 


For application forms and in- 
terview appointments, please 
contact the 
Student Placement Office 
11149-91 Ave., Phone 433-3737 


In three games against Calgary, 
Waddle has permitted one single, 
solitary, lonely goal. 

The Bears dominated the Dinnies 
in every conceivable aspect of the 
game—shots, goals, penalties, goal 
posts hit, body chceks and Molson’s 
scholarship boys in action. (We had 
one—Dinnies had none. One is still 
with the Calgary club but he is a 
semi-semi-regular). 

In the third period the Bears 
hammered in four goals in 89 sec- 
onds—undoubtedly some sort of re- 
cord. 

The Bears led 4-0 on single goals 
in each of the first two periods and 
a pair early in the third when the 
machine-gun-like volley began. 


GOALS, GOALS GOALS! 


Dave Zarowny’s power play goal © 


at 5:46 got the ball rolling. Harp- 
er’s second of the day followed 52 
seconds later. Rookie Terry Cutler 
tipped in number three at 7:00. 
Braunberger’s second in as many 
gene finished the mad flourish at 
7:15. 

The Dinnies were rendered al- 
most unconscious by the outburst 


—AI Yackulic photo 


and succumbed meakly to another 
two goals before the final bell. 


Harper was the top marksman 
with three goals. He got five all 
told in the two games. 


Other Bear scorers were Del Bil- 
lings who also picked up three 
helpers, Merose Stelmaschuk, Zar- 
owny, Cutler, Braunberger, Dar- 
rel LeBlane and Gord Jones. 


Stelmaschuk was especially ef- 
fective for the Bears. An 18 year 
old rookie from Fairview, Alberta, 
Merose was a going concern all day 
for the Bears. He is a real fine 
skater and shifty as hell. In fact, 
his biggest problem is that he has 
too many good moves, if that’s pos- 
sible. 

The game was an abbreviated af- 
fair. The clubs wanted to see a 
portion of the Grey Cup game and 
mutually consented to play 15 
minutes non-stop in the first two 
periods. The last five minutes of the 
periods and the third period were 
regulation time. They didn’t even 
stop to clean the ice after the first 
period. The Bears cleaned up any- 
way. 


Japan student games 


get support 


OTTAWA (CUP)—The Canadian 
Union of Students intends to co- 
operate in sending a Canadian en- 
try to next year’s World Student 
Games in Japan. 


The CUS board of directors voted 
here at the weekend to participate 
jointly in the project with the Can- 
adian Intercollegiate Athletic Un- 
ion. 

The games are conducted by the 
Federal Internationale du Sport 
Universitaire, to which CUS is the 
official Canadian representative. 


Board members agreed to negoti- 
ate with the CIAU—which holds 
the key to the federal government 
support for the Canadian entry— 
but made it clear CUS will be seek- 
ing three concessions from that 
body. 

The three conditions are:— 
®FISU eligibility regulations, not 

the tighter CIAU ones, will apply; 


@Students will have equal repre- 
sentation on selection commit- 
tees; and 


y 


of CUS 


® Canada will enter as many sports 
as possible at the games. 


KIDD, CROTHERS LEAD 


Canadian track stars Bruce Kidd 
and Bill Crothers have been head- 
ing up a Toronto-based committee 
which will attempt to negotiate an 
agreement with the CIAU 

Failing conclusion of an agree- 
ment satisfactory to CUS, CUS 
president Doug Ward has been 
mandated by the board to negotiate 
with Kidd’s ad hoc (for this pur- 
pose) committee in sending a Can- 
adian entry to Japan. 

Cost of sending a delegation to 
the games has been estimated at 
about $50,000. - 

CUS first entered international 
competition when it sponsored an 
entry to the 1965 summer student — 
games at Budapest, and FISU was 
so pleased with the Canadian per- 
formance there it granted perman- 
ent membership to CUS. 

CUS then gent the 1965 Canadian 
intercollegiate hockey champions, 
the University of Manitoba Bisons, _ 
to the 1966 Winter oivereiade in ; 
Turin, italy, last winiet, ; 


Y es 
eases 


s 


By LAWRIE HIGNELL 


The Bears split their WCIAA 
doubleheader over the weekend, 
shading the University of Calgary 
Dinosaurs 72-70 on Friday and then 
falling apart on Saturday night to 
lose 76-43. 

The two games were the first for 
both the Dinnies and the Bears and 
left them tied in the league behind 
the University of Saskatchewan 
Huskies who swept their double- 
header opener against the Univer- 
sity of Manitoba Bisons. 

The Bears were unbelievably 
good Friday night and unbelievably 
bad in their Saturday night en- 
counter. 

Friday the Bear hoopers started 
off strong scoring the first basket 
on a Korchinsky tip-in. They 
hustled on defense and looked 
ready for a good game. 

The scoring punch of the Dino- 
saurs, however, soon told the tale. 
They consistently hit from the out- 
side and then unleashed a tight 
press which stumped the Bears for 
several minutes. 

After ten minutes the Bears were 
down 21-12. They switched to a 
man-to-man defense in an attempt 
to smother Calgary’s outside shoot- 
ing. 

The Dinosaurs, helped by poor 
refereeing, used the switch in de- 
fense to fast break the Bears and 
build their lead to 15 points. 


DINNIES LEAD 


A time-out straightened the 
Bears up and they came on hard in 
the last two minutes of the first 
half to close the edge to six points 
at 39-33. ‘ 

Six-foot, five-inch forward War- 
ren Champion proved to be the 
Bears’ spark in the last minutes as 
he tipped in two shots and hit three 
jump shots to run his half-time 
total to 12 followed closely by Ed 
Blott with ten. : 

Early in the second half the 
Bears started to show the hustle 
which eventually won them the 
game. They used the fast break 
and strong defensive rebounding 
by Champion to close the gap to 
two points with over eleven min- 
utes left in the game. 

Calgary surged out to a six point 
lead again but then lost one of their 
first string forwards on five fouls. 


BEARS COME BACK 


With five minutes left in the 
game the Bears finally took the 
lead on a good pass play to Blott 
and then back to Melnychuk who 
scored on the lay-up.” 

The score changed hands seven 
times in the next four minutes be- 
fore the Bears built a three point 
lead 70-67. 

With thirty seconds remaining 
and the Bears holding a 72-70 point 
margin, the Dinosaurs brought the 
ball down the court and missed 
three shots. 

Ed Blott got the rebound and 
then dropped the ball to give Cal- 
gary an easy shot. However luck 
was with the Bears and Calgary 


¢ 
~ 


missed the lay-up and the score 
ended in the Bears favour 72-70. 

Darwin Semotiuk saved the Bears 
in the second half as he clicked on 
four 30-40 foot jump shots to break 
what had been an effective zone de- 
fense by the Dinosaurs. After the 
game Semotiuk commented, “I 
couldn’t hit the broad side of a 
barn door in the first half.” 


COACH PLEASED 


The coaches were certainly 
pleased with the important four- 
point win. The game counts in both 
the WCIAA and Provincial leagues. 

Coach Glassford placed the blame 
on himself for the poor first half 
showing. He was attempting a new 
defense against Calgary and said 
of the team in the second half, 
“they played basketball after I 
finished botching things up .. . 
the difference was that we just had 
more power on the boards.” 

Top scorers for the Bears were 
Blott and Champion with 16 apiece 
followed by captain Korchinsky 
with 13. 

Robin Fry was the Dinosaurs’ 
star in the losing cause as he hoop- 
ed 23 followed closely by Bill 
Mucklow with 20. 


DINNIES 76, BEARS 43 


Saturday’s encounter looked 
about the same until the second 
half began. 


The Bears fell quickly behind 
22-11 with ten minutes played in 
the first half and shooting made all 
the difference. They didn’t score 
their first field shot for four and a 
half minutes. 

The team looked tired but pick- 
ed up near the end of the half and 
closed the gap to eight points at 
35-27. 

Captains Korchinsky of the Bears 
and Fry of the Dinosaurs displayed 
some excellent ball control at one 
interval in the game. Fry hit for 
two right-handed hook shots and 
Korchinsky countered with two 
left-handed hooks. 

Guard Ken Shields hooped 13 in 
the first half while Fry scored a 
dozen. 

Champion was the Bears first 
half top scorer with nine points. 
POOR SECOND HALF 

The second half proved to be a 
nightmare. Calgary literally ran 
the Bears into the floor and put a 
lid on the Bears’ basket. 

After seven minutes of play the 
Bears had scored four points and 
trailed 45-31. 

As the second half went on the 
Bears’ shooting got worse and worse 
and they missed easy lay-ups, 
many times three or four in a row. 

Calgary’s second stringers took 
over and pushed the score to a final 
76-43 as the Bears did everything 
wrong. 

Ed Blott felt “the guys got dis- 
couraged in the second half when 
the ball wouldn’t go in.” 

Top scorer again for Calgary was 
centre Fry with 27 points followed 
by Shields with 19. Bear hoopers 
were Blott with 13 and Champion 
with 11. 


ADDRESS TO:— 


FORMER 
UAC STUDENTS 


IF YOU HAVE NOT YET RECEIVED YOUR 1966 
TALLYSTICK, PLEASE SEND YOUR NAME AND 


TALLYSTICK 
UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY 
CALGARY, ALBERTA 


ig Bears split doubleheader 


ae 


THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, November 30, 1966 . 


= 


—Perry Afaganis photo 


RON LOUGHEED 


... tries for another two 


DR. P. J. GAUDET 
DR. D. B. EAGLE 
OPTOMETRISTS 


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5 ‘THE GATEWAY, Wednesday, November 30, 1966 


Canadian University Press 


DATELINE 


Remembrance day sparks debate 


WINNIPEG—The Manitoban has been besieged by contro- 
versy. 


On Nov. 15, The Manitoban printed two editorial articles 
about the way Remembrance Day is being observed. 

On Nov. 17, Gene Telpner, a columnist for the Winnipeg Free 
Press administered a sharp rebuke to the writers of the two 
articles. 

After excerpts from the two editorials were reprinted in the 
Free Press Coffee Break column, objections deluged the uni- 
versity president, radio stations, and newspapers. All took 
exception to the editorials which they interpreted as poking 
fun at Remembrance Day. 

In the Manitoban article headlined “Poppycock” Jay Shapiro 
said, “To all those soliders who perished in battle in order that 
we could bomb out to Grant Forks for the weekend—thanks 
a lot, fellas, for a job well done.” 

In the second editorial article, D’Arcy Bancroft said, “The 
woman who lost five sons in the War has suffered enough. 
Deliberately re-opening the wounds that time has tired to heal, 
with the nation watching her via television, is unspeakable 
cruelty. 

“Insult is added to injury when she is surrounded by 
legioneers who hope to use the sympathy engendered by the 
occasion to wring higher pensions out of the populace and 
politicians whose predecessors did much to cause the war in 
the first place.” 

In the Coffee Break column Telpner said, “both the young ~ 
authors attacked Remembrance Day like it was a dirty word.” 

He said both editorials made him sick to his stomach. 


Honor system not honored _ is ; 

WINNIPEG—Arts students at the University of Manitoba —Dave Sutherland photo 
voted for Model Parliament on the honor system, but the chief THE GAS MILEAGE IS GREAT, BUT IT SURE BURNS PEANUTS — E! mer elephant 
returning officer refused to honor the honor system. . and Sheila Wynn, arts 3, seem only too happy to pose for our Treasure Van promo. For those 
Her ed sek bene ie nee nb onl el Pensa void as of you interested, the big show will be held this year from Dec. 5 to Dec. 9 at the armed forces 

BredaGoriat arisreb vecciredithe ballothax and sct Vi us building and will feature many unusual items. Pretty girls and pretty elephants, however won't 
in the Tier Building with a sign explaining the voting procedure. be among this year’s exotic items for sale, since they rarely get by customs. 


The box was then left unattended. 

Warren Magnusson, Liberal House Leader, received a call 
from the arts building, went over and tore the sign down and 
had a student look after the ballot box. 


Magnusson said “Corrin must be pretty stupid if he thought . ah a GOVERNMENT 
this is the way to run an election.” EM PLOYMENT : y 


Corrin said explicit instructions were left for voters, and he 
“felt the arts students would be honest.” pp T of 


Educated housewives? 


BURNABY—Chatelaine magazine was denounced by Simon 
Fraser President Pat McTzggart-Cowan as a “naughty, mis- 
informed journal” at Friday’s banquet for delegates to the B.C. ; 
ee pet Sharlene fs! : : rae Representatives from the various departments outlined will be pleased to discuss 

He made the comment in connection with an article, “Can Meh A : 

Canada Afford College Educated Housewives?”, claiming the career opportunities with interested students on the following dates: 
taxpayer was being cheated in educating young women who 
soon married and became economically useless. 


McTaggart-Cowan said the article contained “disjointed facts : Dec. 2 . PROBATION OFFICERS B.A., B.Sc. 
and fiction in a rambling style, leaving out the professions of (Dept. of the Attorney General) 

Baron feck. Dec. 5, 6 ENGINEERS—Dept. of Public Health Civil, Mechanical 
He said it had drawn incorrect conclusions in “painting an ze . ept. of Fublic Hea ivi, ive : 
image that education is a device for producing computer- io peas Engineering, Air and and Chem. Majors 

oriented personnel.” ater Pollution 
The university is not an “overgrown marriage bureau for ) ee ; 
women” as Chatelaine implied, he said, but actually there exists : Dec. 5, 6, 7, : INSTRUCTORS Engineering, Arts, 
ey aance in ihe ratio between male and female students, 12 (Institute of Technology) Science, Commerce 
only one-third of those in university being women. , f 
McTaggart-Cowan told delegates the education of present Dec. 5, 6 y Poe ae ae DISTRICT ae agree: B.Sc. in Agric. 
men and women will measure the extent of future generations’ (Extension Branch) 
education. Dec. 8, 9 . AGRICULTURE INSTRUCTORS B.Sc. in Agric. 
U g “ti h d | (Colleges of Agriculture) 
niversities shut doors Dec. 8, 9,13, 6. TEACHERS Risinstunof 3 years 
VANCOUVER—Canadian universities may have to close 14 (Correspondence School Branch) Education 
their doors to many eligible students within the next decade, ‘ 
University of British Columbia’s president warned. Deal : ‘(Beets ae Ee ee M.Sc. Zoology or 
Retiring president John Macdonald was commenting on a PE eh Biology 
report released last week by the Association of Universities Dec. 12, 33, . SOCIAL WORKERS BA 
and Colleges of Canada. 14, 15, 16 Dept. of Publi f on 
The report, written by AUCC research director Dr. Edward ; 4 ( Pe Public Wel are) . é 
Sheffield, predicted enrollment in Canadian universities will Dec. 13 . PUBLIC LAND APPRAISERS: B.Sc. in Agric. 
double to 553,000 in 1976. Present enrollment is estimated at (Dept. of Lands and Forests) 
206,000. 
Asked whether he thought universities could handle the Dec. 14 . PROGRAMMERS B.A., B.Sc., B.;Comm. 
double load. Mr. Macdonald said, “They are certainly not going (Data Processing Branch) 


to do this unless there is substantial infusion of money over 
and above what there is now. 


Dec. 15,16 11. MARKET & LABOUR RESEARCH _ B.A.,B.Sc., B.Comm. 
“The greatest problem of all, of course, is the lack of OFFICERS (Bureau of Statistics) B.Se. Eng. 


teachers. You can put the buildings up in t r three years, i ek ‘ 
Bae ee he eine te thd the tencherom. Z Dec. 15,16 12. ENGINEERS—Dept. of Public Works Civil and Mechanical 
“This is why I have always encouraged the development of Majors 
graduate schools at UBC,” he said. 
The Sheffield projections predicted graduate student en- 
rollment would increase by only two per cent over the next Career brochures and an interview appointment can be obtained through the Stu- 


five years. dent Placement Office.